@Ole-Egil:
I don't think Eyetech has any say in the matter.
They shouldn't, but
some things really make you wonder...
(OS4 on the Peg with a proper licence kinda WOULD prick a hole in the balloon of a certain petitioning Swede, though).
How so?
(I assume you're referring to me, or any of the other Swedes, who are petitioning AInc on this matter.)
I mean, what has changed?
Has the compulsory trademark licensing + OS bundling + hw-vendor supplied dongle requirements been revoked? If that had happened, it'd be a GOOD thing, and it'd show that AInc listened to its market. No popped balloons in that case, maybe popped champagne bottles. But this hasn't happened.
If anything, this farce serves to yet again illustrate how absolutely worthless and counterproductive this supposed "customer protection" and "quality/compatibility assurance" nonsense really is.
It would mean that the freakshow ran by that kid Ryan,
Merlancia(!!!), arguably the company with the worst track record (vapour-ware wise, legally, and so on...) in the silly former Amiga market, is considered Good Enough for us stupid customers by AInc, that this parody of a company (Merlancia, not Ainc this time) should be trusted to wield the "Amiga" trademark, that their vaporware product has passed through AInc's strict quality assurance procedure, that AmigaOS4 has been found to run flawlessly on the Pegasos mobo that this vapourbox allegedly would contain...
"From the top of the company to the bottom, we are committed to championing the cause of quality for the consumer and will ensure that substandard products do not make it into the Amiga market where they can do irreparable damage to the reputation of the platform. Licencees will have to develop and resource a full customer solution, with guarantees on product quality, delivery, and most important of all post sales support, with firm commitments to repair, replacement and turnaround, elements that have blighted the platform over the last five years."In light of what we all have seen, all of that is nothing but a sick joke.
Let's see what reputation the "Amiga" trademark has gained with AInc's trademark licensing.
AmigaDE: It's been three years, and it does not yet exist. It hasn't been demoed. No product has ever ran it. The company behind the licensed technology has said it can't be used to build what AInc announced.
AAPlayer/AACE/whatever: A whole lot of former "partners" with changed minds. Two sets of games from third parties that only run on embedded Windows versions, and that mostly are of worse quality than the Java games that people download for free.
AmigaOS: First discontinued ("it's dead, DE is the future"), then luckily picked up by a third party. When it's released people won't be allowed to buy it, unless they at the same time buy overpriced hardware from a restricted subset of a third party market, for no other reason than to artificially create a source of income from trademark licenses.
"AmigaOne 1200": Discontinued vapourware, while promised to be "on schedule and r...". Oh well. You all know Dammy's favourite.
Teron CX/"AmigaOne SE": Flawed hardware and firmware, severely overpriced by the licensee, never ran AmigaOS, never tested by AInc, was never meant to be a consumer product, discontinued right under the nose of the licensee.
The "Amiga" trademark has so far been haphazardly slapped on ONE functional, useful and released third party product - The
Teron PX ("AmigaOne XE"). But AmigaOS still doesn't run on it (yet it's passed AInc's compatibility tests), nobody at AInc has even seen a board (yet it's passed their quality certification, even though it didn't even have Gerald Carda's "wire-fix" at the time it was first sold as an "AmigaOne"), it's never been sold with AmigaOS nor a firmware dongle as required, there are obvious delivery problems, it costs $300 more from the licensee than what another more reputable dealer was going to charge before they changed their minds during their hardware testing, the licensee has no control over the future of the product, and customer support seems to mean "there's a Debian manual with the latest boards, and haven't you been signed up to that customer-created Yahoo mailinglist yet?".
And at the same time, another license applicant (apparently very capable, experienced and with a good track record) has been
turned down or plain ignored, while judging by this story Merlancia (a clown operation that most sane people wouldn't trust to supervise the drying process of a newly painted wall) would have gotten a license!? I know it's been said that Merlancia has borrowed money to AInc, but COME ON!
If you'd want to buy AmigaOS for a Pegasos(II), you'd not be allowed to buy your hardware anywhere but from
Merlancia[/i]! How wonderful...
Oh yeah, I feel great being protected like this!
